Newsweek organization
also: Newsweek magazine
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Related entities (most co-mentioned)
CIAintelligence service · 6Contrasorganization · 4United Statescountry · 3The New York Timesorganization · 3Time-Lifeorganization · 3Nicaraguacountry · 3Washington, D.C.place · 2U.S. Congressorganization · 2Time Inc.organization · 2The Washington Postorganization · 2Ronald Reaganperson · 1Indonesia '65 coupevent · 1Afghanistancountry · 1Vietnamcountry · 1William Pawleyperson · 1Sukarnoperson · 1U.S. State Departmentorganization · 1William Caseyperson · 1Malcolm Xperson · 1Mafiaorganization · 1Mohammad Mosaddeghperson · 1Japancountry · 1Henry Luceperson · 1Liberty Broadcasting Systemorganization · 1
Claims (3)
CIA recruited
Newsweek book_quoted
“of the Unification Church. Reuters, Hearst Newspapers, Scribd Howard, Newsweek Magazine, and Mutual Broadcasting System, the Miami Herald, and the Saturday Evening Post, along with the New York Herald Tribune. By far the most valuable of th…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Twilight of the Shadow Government #4 @ 22:12
Enrique Bermudez member_of
Newsweek documented
“rode out the remainder of the Civil War from the safety of NBC Row in Washington, D.C. When the Samosas government collapsed, Bermudez began a new career, you guys are going to love this, as a truck driver for Newsweek. Like the CIA mouthpi…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Dark Alliance Part 3 by Gary Webb @ 38:59
Malcolm X headed
Newsweek book_quoted
“Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Live, Fortune Sports Illustrated. Malcolm M…”
▶ The Colonel's Corner The Invisible Government by Dan Smoot Part 6 II @ 13:14
Mentions (25)
▶ 1:22:32
He was registered as a foreign student. He was not registered as an American. And then one more to bring up for you guys, Colonel. As I said, the article that it reminded me of. Let me bring this up for you guys to see. And we probably talk…
▶ 1:31:59
And internationally, using a low-profile force of clandestine warriors who sometimes wear civilian clothes as they carry out their assignments. There's so much more to this. And it's so phenomenal. But it's the opposite version of what you'…
▶ 51:03
In many different countries, at least 11 of them, that was echoed by the government in the ones that we hadn't cued yet. However, the governments that we had were all on board. The Life magazine noted these protests by observing the world c…
▶ 4:11
Sorry to interrupt, Colonel, but there's no sound on rubble. OK, got it. Thank you. Before the year was in, Time and Newsweek had chimed in. They were running cover stories about the crack epidemic. Newsweek would say that it was the bigges…
▶ 20:58
Quote, what kind of message are we sending out there? On the one hand, when we are saying that it is an epidemic, you have your Newsweek story. You have your Time magazine story. You have the New York Times story, all of which are controlle…
▶ 23:55
That produced incredible results. Newsweek was calling crack a national scandal, and the New York newspapers were blaming every crime on a crackhead. Crack was a national menace, he said, and in 1986, it was the year of crack. The PR campai…
▶ 24:53
and crack dealers. It was a painless way to get free publicity. Other analysts found that most of the information appearing in the New York Times, Newsweek, and Time came from two sources, cops and politicians. Drug researchers or academics…
▶ 15:47
It was under the radar. Mercury News executive editor Jerry Seppes would later tell Newsweek that he only read part of the story before it appeared in print, which was an amazing admission, if true. Perhaps my editors thought I was exaggera…
▶ 38:59
rode out the remainder of the Civil War from the safety of NBC Row in Washington, D.C. When the Samosas government collapsed, Bermudez began a new career, you guys are going to love this, as a truck driver for Newsweek. Like the CIA mouthpi…
▶ 9:29
Barely a year had passed since the CIA had taken over the financing of the Contras and already a covert war was no longer a secret. The week before the 1982 elections, Newsweek magazine published the first detailed account of the Reagan adm…
▶ 10:25
According to one account, the main source for Newsweek's story was none other than CIA Director William Casey, who wanted to ensure that the Contra project didn't get shelved. Now that it was public knowledge that the administration was hel…
▶ 11:24
In response to the Newsweek report, Congressman Tom Harkins proposed a complete cutoff of the funding of all paramilitary activities in Nicaragua. The fact that the war was illegal, Harkins argued, was nothing compared to the U.S. governmen…
▶ 40:55
And a lot of the finagling in the Asian theater was done by Ri in Korea, in South Korea, Chiang Kai-shek in Taiwan, and those two war criminals whose names escape me right now. So just keep that in mind as well. A country, let's see. So Cam…
▶ 41:26
that General Suharto's Indonesia was also involved in some of this fronting for Japan. Now, remember, Sukarno was the good guy. Suharto is the guy that the CIA installed after the coup in Indonesia so they could steal the gold and oil there…
▶ 49:36
on our forces in South Vietnam, but the CIA completely controlled Cambodia. So how'd that happen? The military imagination, as revealed to Newsweek, seems to have envisioned this massive buildup, which he likens to a James Bond spy thriller…
▶ 2:58
oil fields, and still all of the shit in the Middle East. So they were constantly, if you go back and look, and I actually did check some of the resources that the author was using, like a Newsweek article, wrote, this is the title of it, C…
▶ 15:30
In common with most large covert operations, Nicaragua was blown. As early as March 82, major U.S. newspapers were reporting on the operation and Reagan's ordering it. Washington was shaken in early November when Newsweek magazine published…
▶ 15:57
mention of the CIA and speculation on the role John Negroponte was playing in it. This flap tied up both state and CIA wires with cable traffic and featured State Department denials, while Negroponte and his friends wrote letters to the edi…
▶ 46:46
Edward Barrett, a former Newsweek reporter, became the chairman. None of this satisfied the Department of Defense, now worried about gaps between peacetime efforts and those contemplating psyops and war. Barrett tried to mollify the Pentago…
▶ 35:39
would give his left you-know-what, well, let's just say index finger, Roosevelt said, if he could go somewhere in the field and engineer the coup himself. Dulles' handiwork could also be seen in the compliant U.S. press covering the regime …
▶ 29:52
Predictably, the New York Times and Washington Post set euphoric tone of the press coverage, with Robert Donovan, the same journalist whose book on assassinations, had made a debut in the commission. Newsweek National Affairs editor John J.…
▶ 6:10
Working in the Kennedy White House not only gave Schlesinger a voice in global affairs, it offered him the intellectual, as an intellectual, a chance to rub elbows with everyone. He gossiped over lunch with actresses and actors about Frank …
▶ 13:14
Saturday Review of Literature. Let me see. Philip Graham of the Washington Post and Times Herald. We come across him all the time. Walter Lippman, Ascended Columnist. Henry Luce, Publisher of Time Live, Fortune Sports Illustrated. Malcolm M…
▶ 22:49
numerous journalists, things like from Barron's, Newsweek, Human Events, those types of organizations. And again, Newsweek for a very long time has been associated with the intelligence community. A majority of them were economists. Eight m…
▶ 21:44
Henry Luce of Time, Inc., author Salzberger of the New York Times, Barry Bingham, Sr. of the Louisville Cardinal Courier Journal, and James Copley of Copley News Service. Other corporations which cooperated with the CIA was ABC, NBC, Associ…